Gas prices: Now at $4.08 per gallon, rising more than $1 in last month

The national average price for regular gas increased again on Thursday, rising to $4.081 per gallon, according to AAA. It marks the fourth consecutive day gas prices have risen amid a trend of steadily rising gas prices since the second week of January. 

Thursday’s fuel cost is almost 2 cents higher than Wednesday’s, when the national average price for a gallon of regular gas was $4.064 per gallon and over 6 cents per gallon higher than Tuesday’s pricing, when it was $4.018 per gallon and broke the $4-per-gallon threshold for the first time since 2022. Over the last month, the national average price of regular gas has risen by more than $1 per gallon.

Gas prices hit a five-year low of $2.79 per gallon on Jan. 12, shortly before the one-year anniversary of the beginning of President Donald Trump’s second term. Affordable gas prices and fuel costs had typically been a staple of Trump’s terms, up to and including January 2026. However, since achieving a cost of $2.79 per gallon, gas prices started to rise. The increase was gradual, occurring over the last two weeks of January and all of February. The high gas prices more closely resemble the costs from when Trump’s predecessor, former President Joe Biden, was in office.

First, the price hike was attributed to winter storms that plagued the country and affected fuel shipments in late January and February. A month ago, the national average price for regular gas was $2.997 per gallon. It is also higher to fuel up at the pumps now than a year ago, when gas was $3.238 per gallon. Since Operation Epic Fury began, the national average price for a gallon of regular gas has skyrocketed. The joint military operation with Israel against Iran has caused great fluctuation in the global oil market and prices.

Thursday’s price of $4.081 per gallon is a record high for both of Trump’s terms. It’s still a ways to go from the highest price ever recorded in June 2022, when Biden was in office, and the national average was over $5 per gallon. However, if the current trend of rising gas prices continues, it could eclipse that total sometime in May. This is especially true given the traditional hike in gas prices that occurs through Memorial Day Weekend, which is only 53 days away.

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Regardless of who the president is, fuel costs vary by section of the country. Currently, the Midwest and Plains Region has the states with the lowest gas prices. Earlier this year, it was the states along the Gulf of America. States on the West Coast have the highest fuel costs, which have been a constant for years. Washington, D.C. has an average price of $4.200 per gallon on Thursday, higher than the national average.

California remains the state with the highest statewide average gas price in the country at $5.891 per gallon. Hawaii is next at $5.503 per gallon. This is followed by Washington state at $5.365. Oregon is next at $4.966, followed by Nevada at $4.942. 

Conversely, Oklahoma has the nation’s most affordable gas prices, at $3.272 per gallon. Kansas is next at $3.334 per gallon. This is followed by Nebraska at $3.426, North Dakota at $3.43, and Iowa, with a statewide average of $3.48 per gallon.

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